Multi-modal framework for automatic detection of diagnostically important regions in nonalcoholic fatty liver ultrasonic images

Publication date: 2018Source: Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering, Volume 38, Issue 3Author(s): R. Bharath, P. Rajalakshmi, Mohammad Abdul MateenAbstractThe severity of fat in ultrasonic liver images is quantified based on characteristics of three regions in the image namely diaphragm, periportal veins and texture of liver parenchyma. The characteristics of these regions vary with the severity of fat in the liver, and is subjected to low signal to noise ratio, low contrast, poorly defined organ boundaries, etc., hence locating these regions in ultrasound images is challenging task for the sonographers. Automated detection of these regions will help the sonographers to do accurate diagnosis in shorter time, and also acts as a fundamental step to develop automated diagnostic algorithms. In this paper, we propose a novel multi-modal framework for detecting diaphragm, periportal veins and texture of liver parenchyma in ultrasonic liver ultrasound images. Since the characteristics of these regions differ from each other, we propose a specific algorithm for detecting each region. Diaphragm and periportal veins are detected with the combination of Viola Jones and GIST descriptor based classifier, while homogeneous texture regions are detected with the combination of histogram features based classifier and connected components algorithm. The proposed algorithm when tested on 180 ultrasound liver images, detected the diaphragm, periportal veins and texture regions with an accura...
Source: Biocybernetics and Biomedical Engineering - Category: Biomedical Engineering Source Type: research